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hhpj[jliii?!3 Chicago and vicinity fair mu~^v s saturday becoming unsettled sunday b^r^fcskg not much cnan se in temperature j^s-^k v 'â– i 9 ht variable winds shifting to east i u â€¢ l/f ' Â«*<| range of temperature wwi^s average 37 Chicago examiner this issue contains the big new home edition supplement which is distributed simultaneously by 50 leading central western newspapers saturday vol ix no 267 a m saturday Chicago october 28 1 911 82 pages kegibtered â€¢ Â» c 8 patent offim price one cent stssss & Â» enright verdict reached is a late report brady and erbstein declare prosecution bought evidence against alleged slugger fred irish is attacked altman's coat tried on again in final sensational ap peal to peers it was rumored in the county build ing at 1 o'clock this morning that the jury had arrived at a verdict manrice enright charged with the mur der of vincent altman awaited all night the verdict that means life or death to him after failing to reach a decision at 10:30 o'clock last night the jury in his trial retired to sleeping quarters and will report to judge mcsurely at 10 o'clock this morning at 1 o'clock this morning lights were still burning in the sleeping room and the jurors were apparently still debating judge mcsurely went home at 9:30 after ordering the courtroom cleared attacking the veracity of fre'l irish wit ness for the prosecution buriing verbal bombs at inspector huut and captain hal pin and declaring that the prosecution has been trying to lynch their client attorneys james t brady and charles e erbstein yesterday concluded their appeals for liurlgiit anil the ease went to the jury at c.16 last evening at 9 o'clock the jury rapped on the door and it was thought a verdict bad been reached court attaches sent for judge mcsurely but it developed the jurors merely desired a plat of the briggs house which had been introduced in evi dence one of the most sensational events of the day came when enright who was prob ably the coolest man in the courtroom wrote something on a piece of paper and passed it across the table to attorney erb stein give me liberty or give me death was inscribed on the paper and like a flash attorney erbstein leaped to his feet and shouted those words at the jury erbstein shouts at jury if this man is guilty shouted erb stein he should be hanged if he is inno cent he should be set at liberty and re stored to his family there is no half-way measure every bit of evidence in this case has been bought why did inspector hunt go to the couuty hospital knowing that he would find irish there because harry brolaski had already been there what did brolaski give to irish when he went there a book entitled easy money why because ever since that time irish has been getting easy money ' where is brolaski now and where were inspector hunt and frank pardee and others whose names appear on the back of this indictment there is no question as to the fact that altman was murdered in the bar of the briggs house but there is a big quest'on as to who did it there was a revolver found in the overcoat left iu the briggs house and i now charge that state's /: torney wayin.m and inspector hunt know the real owner of the revolver wh.ch the state claims belougs to the defendant attacks the evider.ce the evidence in this case ft not strong enough to convict a dog said attorney brady they are asking you to lynch this prisoner they don't wa-it you to read the instructions of the court attorney brady then put on the coat which the state claims was worn by en right on the day of the shooting mr brady is a much larger man than euright and he claimed that the overcoat fitted him perfectly then he donned a coat worn during the j trial by enright and called the attention j of the jurors to the tact that the sleeves were several inches short and that he i could not button it across his chest both attorneys for he defense devoted considerable time attacking the leputation ' and veracity of fred irish and mr brady declared that the reason the state took j the bell boy witnesses into custody was for fear the boys would tell some one the truth two lose saloon licenses mayor harrison late yesterday afternoon ordered the licenses of h derlliig and b kennedy saloonkeepers at 143 west tblrtv ninth street revoked on complaint of inspector p d o'brien the murder of william bib lynch in the place july 23 by william dunne a bwther-in-lttw of maurice moss en i ms*t was the cause for the mayor's actios the men were said to have be j langsd to a band of labor sluggers iu which maurice enright was eurolisd j spinal meningitis cure through serum method announced by flexner rockefeller institute head declare child's disease will not be tenth as dangerous new york oct 27 dr simon flex ' ner director of the rockefeller institute for medical research announced to-day 1 to the annual conference of sanitary oftl ; cers of the state in carnegie lyceum that i epidemic spinal meningitis could now be ! absolutely controlled j dr flexner said the cure had been per fected through the discovery of a new : method of using the serum it is now injected into the cerebral spinal membrane ; instead of into the blood influenza meningitis in the child said the doctor will with the application of : this new method of treatment be not one-tenth as dangerous as it has formerly j ; been ' it has taken a large sum of money and ; a long time to perfect this cure this is the first time i have announced it as only very recently have i demonstrated ito my own satisfaction that the serum ] will do what i claim it will dr w s magill of the state hygienic â€¢ laboratory expressed his disapproval of the way in which many physicians were , , using diphtheria autftoxin every time we send to a doctor any antitoxin for diphtheria there is a sheet of instructions inclosed he said but ' out of 100 cases 1 found only one had tried to follow directions of the 100 cases i looked into all of the patients died and in ever instance antitoxin had been i used but had not been used correctly the mortality per 100,000 in france j from diphtheria is three to four in this i country it is sixteen to seventeen why : the case i have just cited about the mis 1 use of antitoxin is a good reason i think j 10 deputy bailiffs back municipal judges vote to reinstate them committee considers three j judges of the municipal court on the j motion of judge gemmill chairman of the i committee which had investigated the sub j ject voted last night to reinstate seven of the ten deputy bailiffs who ha'd applied for reinstatement following their discharge in july by chief bailiff thomas m hunter the cases of the other three men john t mckeone wil liam c petrow and einil c chris tensea viere referred back to â– the original comnrrtee judges t'hlir rooney and fry for further investigation the reinstated men are james e mclaughlin thomas t freeman george seebncher john w belmont charles keinpf and wil \ liam roemisch tests phone robs women thiev pretends to be employe se cures cash Â» the police of the englewood station are looking for a man who represents him self to be an employe of the Chicago tel ephone company and tells nnsuspectiug women that he has called at their homes to repair the telpehoue then ransacks the houses three of his victims are mrs john ma^tney 6508 justine street mrs charles l lindahl 6400 south honore street and mrs george metzger 6440 south honore street the man is described as about thirty years old five feet thvee inches tall and weighing about 150 pounds he wears a blue suit and a biack derby hat horton gives up wife no 2 birthday greetings from england move bigamous peacher to action joliet 111 oct 27 the rev john morton bigamous pastor of beecher to-day stated that amanda brenker his bigamous wife would never be his legal wife he ha renounced his recent marriage ties and in the future will live for his wife in england alone to-day he wrote her asking forgive ness and giving her the first information of bis crime the change in the minister's demeanor was wrought by postcard birth day greetings from his two sons each card bore such tokens of love that they moved him to tears horton also wrote an open letter to the people of beecher offering to leave for england if ae is freed suffragehes hold real prize fight one hundred women cheer as boxers lash each other j for cause's benefit girl of 16 makes speech 1 i best place to get attention of men is at ringside she declares xew york oct 27 one hundred suf fragettes sat as close as they could get to the ring in the longacre a c to-night and cheered wept and applauded in turn as sixteen boxers and two wrestlers fought as they never fought before to acquit themselves well in the eyes of the women the boxing show was given by mrs gus ruhliu for the beneiit of the cause mrs louise white suydam whose husband walter lispenard suydam the young mil lionaire or blue point 1 l 1 divorced her a few weeks ago occupied a ringside seat | with young fred n'ohie and smoked cigar ettes throughout the entire show regard less of the consternation and indiguation of the suffragettes among whom were such well-known workers as baroness von groyss mrs emma bosworth mrs etta edwards and mrs charles wallen der j drops her cigarette when dick muudy in a wrestling bout i applied the ear hold men yelled their ap : provttl but the women frightened cried i out for the grapplers to stop and mrs j ethel stewart president of the peace so | ciety of brooklyn ran from the room de j elanug war was never like this j the lively battle between young saks j and young waiter when each got a bloody nose unnerved mrs suydam and in her ex | citement she dropped her last cigarette j as the seconds climbed over the ropes i with pails of water and turkish towels to swathe the faces of the combatants groans of poor things and too bad went up from the women in all parts of the hall . in the middle of the programme of nine bouts refereed by ruhlin corbett mon tana dan sullivan and the english boxer freddie walsh the old-time frequenters of iue.-eltfb in their tu*rn started at the sight of miss dorothy frooks of bayonne n j known as the youngest suffrage orator in the world enter the ring and make a suf frage speech the audience of 500 cheered lustily as i miss frooks declared that as men would not come to their suffrage meetings they had decided to come to their boxing lights " where they could have the benefit of suffrage speeches miss frooks refer ence to boxing fights pleased the men who recalled the old days of leach cross and his famous references to box fights clubs all too 3low mrs ruhlin tried to join a brooklyn suffrage club said the sixteen-year-old miss frooks but she couldn't find one to suit her they were all too slow that's right chorused a delegation of suffragettes from brooklyn located in the gallery so she just started her own club ex plained miss frooks at miss frooks suggestion three cheers were given for mrs ruhlin to which mrs ruhlin responded by appearing in the ring herself alderman phillips followed mrs ruhlin defending her entertainment by saying that the bishop of loudon had arranged i a series of boxing bouts for the young | people and they 1 proved a great success champion of suffrage turns out to be critic a visiting star that turned out to be a fire cracker sputtered away in an unex pected anti-suffrage speech at the suffrage propaganda luncheon of the woman's party in the rose ballroom of the hotel la salle yesterday afternoon when ex senator dean of nebraska declared that whimsical caprice instead of judgment would dictate woman's use of the ballot the senator had been anticipated as a suffrage champion women don't vote when they can shouted mr dean out in nebraska where they vote for school trustee i was defeated by the women my competitor was handsome with pink cheeks and a curly beard and i'm not and he won that's what a woman would do with the ballot mrs loomis is fired at i wife of ambassador attacked rob bers shoot on posse one caught bpringfibld 0 oct i7 when awak ' ened by burg is in her bedchamber early , this morning mrs francis b loomis wife jof the ambassudor to the turin exposi itiou and former assistant united states j secretary o stave fired on the intruders the robbys retu;;.ed the attack and two bullets grazed her two men one of whom i is charles stoop member of the notorious i bungalow gang of thieves of dayton boarded a freight train sortly after when questioned by trainmen they opened tire brakeman c l brown and conductor s e hounshell were shot brown is dying 1 the desperadoes were tracked by a posse 1 with bloodhounds and stoop was captured after he had been shot twin Taft and five of cabinet here for 3=day stay capital of united states is in Chicago to=day trusts must be bisrupted whether business interests suffer declares president executive tells 5,000 auditors that it is his duty to enforce laws and he proposes to do it his speech is more emphatic than most of his utterances nothing arouses my disgust like a calamity howler he asserts 1 do not want to hurt business but the lawlessness of 20 years will have to be checked harrison cheered by crowd â€¢ if the business interests of the country will be injured by the disruption of the trusts then business will have to suffer for the trusts are to be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law that is president taft's view ef the business and the political situa | tion it was his answer to those who have criticised the administration for the filing of the suit against the steel trust it was the president's declaration that attorney general wickerahani had full authority to start that suit and that the administration would assume the consequences the president minced no words in making his position plain and he made his intention as clear as words could make it there is only one thing to do with these companies that are organ ized for the purpose of creating a monopoly for suppressing trade or for controlling prices he said and then he paused a second that all might hear that one thing that is to disintegrate them as though fearful that even after that he might be misunderstood he i added it is not within my discretion to suspend any statute my duty is t enforce the law and when i find it is violated to prosecute the offenders the president was speaking at the mass meeting arranged for him by the hamilton club at the first regiment armory he was speaking to 5,000 people mostly men who were fairly enthusiastic it was his first speech of his Chicago visit and he made it immediately upon his arrival without consultation with any one and without asking any one's leave speech not set effort he was told by those who welcomed him and introduced him that it was a nonpartisan audience that was perhaps not true although mayor i harrison had been present to welcome him to Chicago and was applaud ed almost as loudly as was the president himself another thing about the speech was that it was not one of the presi dent's set efforts it was not prepared in advance â€” not written out ihe spoke with much greater emphasis than he does when he reads from : manuscript it was clear from the beginning of his speech that the president ' meant to set at rest all controversy upon his attitude toward the trusts hte plunged into that topic first off and when he wound up after the strongest declaration he has ever made he said with a sigh of one who has got through a hard task there now i hope that is . understood the president declared that it is not his purpose to disturb business that his whole hope he insisted is to promote prosperity and he put the | whole burden of any disruption of business upon the men who run the great affairs of the nation you may do as much business as you can within the law was vlr ' tually his message to them but you must obey tue law and he had his say about those who are accusing him of disturbing business if there is any person who arouses my disgust he said it is the calamity howler i would rather cut off my arm than do anything to dis ' turb business especially with the purpose of promoting any political succesr but he went on â€” and there was another significant pause after the word but we have a condition of lawlessness we have had it for twenty years men have gone on combining in the face of the statute issue is not evaded the president did not seek to evade the issue that there may be a cii turbance of business by the attitude of the administration i sun cluirgec with disrupting business he said time and again but he answered with my hope is that business men will square their business with the law he scoffed at the notion that business cannot be conducted withoni violating the law he declined to oelieve those who say business camio go on after the big trusts have been disintegrated he declared that mere bigness in an institution does not mean iu prosecution but that it is the purpose for which a combination is effected that makes it a violator of the law it is one thing he said " to have a great plant to reduce the cost of production and another to have a combination to establish a monopoly suppress trade or control prices and no one can tell me the two things are the same the question of whether a combination is unlawful is an issue of fact his final word to the trusts was most significant of all i hope this strain may cease he said slowly almost solemnly i hope business may square itself with the law but " and again the pause to let what k was going to say soak in but when business is suf president Taft and major butt snapshot of president and his military aide italian baier and 53,000 disappears countrymen storm depository police riot call necessary to calm panic five hundred wildly excited italians stormed the banca dl provideuza e pispar ml 771 west taylor street last night declaring that the owners of the bank had decamped with their money and the po lice of the maxwell street station guarded the bank all of last night fearing vio lence detectives by water and deasy are look ing for the president of the bank domi nicfc tricarlco oss south marshfield ave nue and his brother oscar both of whom have disappeared likewise according to the information secured last night by the police 30,000 of deposits representing the savings of about 1,000 italians has also disappeared detective paul rlccio 767 west taylor street of assistant chief â€¢ schuettler's staff was interrupted last night as he was eating dinner by a clamor at his door he found a score or more of his neighbors who told him the trlcarico brothers had run away with their money riccio telephoned the maxwell street station and hurried to the bank and the efforts of a whole patrol wagon full of policemen were necessary to persuade the angry crowd to disperse starting in business about eighteen months ago the tricarlco brothers have been doing a thriving business last saturday according to guy dignami and frank bellandi dominick trlcarico left Chicago ostensibly for st louis last evening his brother oscar who was left in charge ef the bank called in a friend named zenezianl and asked uim to tend store until he returned shortly afterward one of the depositors who had 400 in the bank presented a check for 100 zenezianl looked in the sate through the drawers in the desks and when he fennd only 10 decided to leave placing the keys which had been given to him by oscar zrlcorico on the counter jhe vaulted over and ran the astonished i depositor immediately gave the alarm first freeze of season freezing weather the first of the present fall season was felt yesterday the mer cury dropping to 82 degrees and from in dications to-day will be equally fchilly a change for the worse if the predictions of unsettled conditions are eorect may he looked for to-morrow a raw northwest wind made the day feel considerably colder than it really was to-day promises to be fair and cold while the wind to-morrow according to present indications will be come variable and unsettled weather may itouow ' ,_ . * pretty young wife held as shoplifter lucille ford chambers jailed for theft tells of elopement with schoolmate charged with obtaining goods under false pretenses from a state street department store lucille ford chambers twenty years old 4si'j keumore avenue was yesterdav arrested uud locked up in a ceil with a professional shoplifter after she had been arrested she told that on july 12 last she eloped to crown point and was married to m chambers a commercial traveler she is a graduate of the lake view high school and a former member of the wilson avenue congrega tional church cloir using the name of mrs m chambers 1525 east sixty-sixth place she is j charged with having obtained a hat some silk hosiery and a coat at the store while waiting for a tiondsmau to come and release her the young woman told the police a portion of her history the story apparently being the old story of a young married woman who wishes pretty things to wear and cannot afford to pay for them pretty and refined in appearance she ; did not look the part of a lawbreaker and was a marked contrast to the woman whose cellmate she was forced to be according to her story her husband was a schoolmate and after a"*boy and girl courtship lastlilg for several years they were married last july going to crown point her story according to the police shows plainly that the elopement was necessitat ed by their lack of cash and consequent lack of ability to at once furnish a home the name she is alleged to have mod when securing the articles at the store la ene which shs is declared to have over heard several days ago while shopping it la understood that she waited until she was sure the other woman had a credit account and then proceeded to use it herself f j gould operated on convalesces prom appendicitis oper ation to live abroad ffhw yore oct 37 frank jay ueuirt it was learned to-day is convalescing at uis fifth avenue nonie after an operation for appendicitis which he underwent last wednesday the operation wÂ»s performed by dr robert coleman kemp but news of it did not reach wall street until to-day mr gould arrived here from paris with mrs gould a few weeks ago and since that time lias been busy consolidating the public utilities companies of virginia upon his arrival he said he intended to make paris his permanent hem president's emphatic ukase against law breaking trusts ) y | here is only one thing to do with these companies that are organ > c * ized for the purpose of creating a monopoly for suppressing trade < ? or for controlling prices â€” that is to disintegrate them \ > it is not within my discretion to suspend any statute my duty ? s is to enforce the law and when i find it is violated to prosecute the > i offenders â€” president Taft at first regiment armory ' s do you like good things to eat a escoffier the great est of french chef3 contributes recipes for a seasonable and deli cious french dinner in to - m oir r ow's s u n\d ay exatkiner order frorrii your dealer to*-day i ___^^

hhpj[jliii?!3 Chicago and vicinity fair mu~^v s saturday becoming unsettled sunday b^r^fcskg not much cnan se in temperature j^s-^k v 'â– i 9 ht variable winds shifting to east i u â€¢ l/f ' Â«* c * ized for the purpose of creating a monopoly for suppressing trade < ? or for controlling prices â€” that is to disintegrate them \ > it is not within my discretion to suspend any statute my duty ? s is to enforce the law and when i find it is violated to prosecute the > i offenders â€” president Taft at first regiment armory ' s do you like good things to eat a escoffier the great est of french chef3 contributes recipes for a seasonable and deli cious french dinner in to - m oir r ow's s u n\d ay exatkiner order frorrii your dealer to*-day i ___^^